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This chapter introduces the technology Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring, a method for detecting individual devices from an overall signal. Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring is the research area and technology behind the third word in Smart Meter Inclusive. Using a smart meter as a basis and recognizing devices from the power profile is not a new idea but is now a common practice in Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring. However, the approach to creating such a measurement system that classifies appliances in real-time and visualizes the results directly on the same hardware has not been existing yet. Smart Meter Inclusive wants to leave the data where it originates, namely with the customer. This book chapter provides a general overview of non-intrusive load monitoring to be able to understand the basics and approaches for such a Smart Meter Inclusive.
Smart meter systems measurements for the verification of the detection & classification algorithms
(2013)
The common corpus optimization method “stop words removal” is based on the assumption that text tokens with high occurrence frequency can be removed without affecting classification performance. Linguistic information regarding sentence structure is ignored as well as preferences of the classification technology. We propose the Weighted Unimportant Part-of-Speech Model (WUP-Model) for token removal in the pre-processing of text corpora. The weighted relevance of a token is determined using classification relevance and classification performance impact. The WUP-Model uses linguistic information (part of speech) as grouping criteria. Analogous to stop word removal, we provide a set of irrelevant part of speech (WUP-Instance) for word removal. In a proof-of-concept we created WUP-Instances for several classification algorithms. The evaluation showed significant advantages compared to classic stop word removal. The tree-based classifier increased runtime by 65% and 25% in performance. The performance of the other classifiers decreased between 0.2% and 2.4%, their runtime improved between −4.4% and −24.7%. These results prove beneficial effects of the proposed WUP-Model.
In this paper, the influence of current sensors of a NILM system is investigated. The current sensors of a classical inductive current transformer and a Rogowski coil are compared. To evaluate the actual influence on the NILM, measurements are performed with two measuring systems with different current sensors. With these measuring systems, 20 different consumers with 50 switch-on and switch-off cycles are measured in parallel. Besides, the influence of the sampling rate on the results of the NILM classification is evaluated. The classification is carried out with features normalized to the performance and without phase information, so only the signal waveform is used to differentiate the devices.
Elevators contribute significantly to the electricity consumption of residential buildings, office buildings and commercial enterprises. In this paper, the electricity consumption is investigated using an elevator system and its individual operating states as example. In addition to analyzing and allocating the energy demand, this work examines how the individual operating states can be determined solely on the basis of the power consumption of the elevator. The knowledge gained from this, such as the usage behavior, the travel profile, or load, is determined independently of the elevator control system. A subsequent installation on any system can be easily realized. In this work, the investigated elevator requires a substantial part of the total annual power consumption in standby (>90 %). This shows an enormous potential for energy savings. The individual elevator states, as well as the load, can be detected very well on the basis of the measured total power consumption. The work thus shows exemplary the potential of an intelligent measurement system for the state detection of elevator systems.